Pritzker orders more than $700 million in spending cuts
Plan includes possible furloughs, prison
closures
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[December 16, 2020]
By PETER HANCOCK
Capitol News Illinois
phancock@capitolnewsillinois.com
SPRINGFIELD – Gov. JB Pritzker announced
more than $700 million in spending cuts on Tuesday, calling it a “first
step” in closing a $3.9 billion revenue shortfall in the current fiscal
year’s budget.
As part of those cuts, Pritzker said his office is negotiating with
employee labor unions to identify $75 million in personnel cost
reductions, which could include furloughs, and that he is establishing a
work group to identify possible closures of Department of Corrections
facilities due to lower inmate populations.
“These cuts reflect the first phase of our path forward, doing what is
within my powers, unilaterally and without the legislature,” Pritzker
said during a news conference in Chicago. “This is going to be tough.
And as my ongoing conversations with General Assembly leaders would
indicate, there is a great deal of work the legislature must do when it
convenes next month.”
The plan includes hiring freezes at several state agencies as well as
reductions or freezes in several grant programs at the Department of
Commerce and Economic Opportunity, the Department of Agriculture and the
Department of Natural Resources. It also includes a freeze on school
maintenance capital grants, which are funded from casino gaming
revenues.
It also calls for delaying a scheduled rate increase for home health
aids who provide in-home and community-based services to the elderly
through the state’s Community Care Program.
In addition to the spending cuts announced Tuesday, Pritzker earlier
announced a plan to borrow $2 billion through the Federal Reserve’s
Municipal Liquidity Facility, a program launched earlier this year to
help state and local governments close budget gaps that have resulted
from the COVID-19 pandemic.
But that still leaves more than $1 billion in savings that will have to
be identified, unless Congress authorizes a relief package that includes
aid to state and local governments, something that Republican leaders in
Congress strongly oppose.
Pritzker said about $2 billion of this year’s shortfall is due to the
COVID-19 pandemic, which has drastically cut into state revenues. The
rest, he said, is part of an ongoing “structural” deficit in the state
budget, one that he had hoped to fill with passage of his proposed
graduated income tax amendment, and he lashed out at Republicans in
Illinois who worked to defeat that proposal on the Nov. 3 ballot.
“It's been two years since Republicans announced their wholesale
opposition to the ‘Fair Tax,’ and it's been 40 days since the election,
and they have yet to produce any viable answer for balancing the
budget,” Pritzker said. “They worked and spent endlessly to defeat the
best option Democrats put on the table. And after all their bluster, it
turns out that Republicans have no plan at all, to put the state on a
firm fiscal foundation.”
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Gov. JB Pritzker announces more than $700 million in spending cuts
in what he calls a "first step" in filling a $3.9 billion revenue
shortfall for the current fiscal year (Credit: Blueroomstream.com)
But GOP leaders in the General Assembly responded quickly, arguing
that the budget shortfall is the result of Democrats being unwilling
to cut spending earlier.
“The Governor can blame others all he wants for the state’s
financial mess, but the fact of the matter is this is a bed of his
own making,” Senate Minority Leader-elect Dan McConchie, of Hawthorn
Woods, said in a statement. “Voters fundamentally rejected his
graduated tax proposal because of their lack of trust in state
government, which stems from years of Springfield increasing taxes
and ignoring the reforms that Republicans have put on the table time
and time again.”
House Minority Leader Jim Durkin, of Western Springs, said the
deficit was built in to the budget that the Democratic-controlled
General Assembly passed in May, which was predicated on passage of
the tax amendment and the state receiving about $5 billion in
federal aid that so far has not materialized.
“Governor Pritzker, (Senate) President (Don) Harmon and (House
Speaker) Mike Madigan were repeatedly warned about the dire
shortfalls in the fantasy budget that relied upon the passage of the
graduated tax and a ‘fingers crossed’ hope for a federal bailout,”
Durkin said in a statement. “Instead of living within our means,
they attempted to trick voters into raising taxes, and were sorely
rejected by Democrat, Republican and Independent voters across the
state.”
The state’s largest public employee labor union pushed back on the
cuts. Roberta Lynch, executive director of AFSCME Council 31, issued
a statement saying the union “is firmly opposed to any demands that
unfairly target state employees.”
“Undoubtedly our state faces a severe fiscal crisis and action is
urgently needed. However, it is grossly unjust to suggest that
frontline state employees who have already sacrificed so much in our
current public health crisis should bear an outsized share of the
burden of fixing the state’s fiscal crisis as well,” she said in the
statement. “Moreover, it is counterproductive in the extreme to
target these employees at a time when the need for state services
and the demands on state government are greater than ever.”
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